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Crown Prince Dipendra Bir Bikram’s palace shooting spree began after his mother tried to veto his chosen fiancée. Dipendra wanted to marry Devyani Rana, a young woman from the familial line from which the Nepali monarchy traditionally chose its wives. However, Dipendra's parents objected to her Indian royal lineage.

Using an assault rifle, Dipendra shot his father, King Birendra, then gunned down his uncle, Prince Dhirendra, as well as Prince Nirajan, Queen Aishwarya and Princess Shruti, before turning the weapon on himself. After the royal massacre, Rana reportedly fled Nepal, fearing for her safety.

“He looked exactly like the Terminator, absolutely expressionless and very focused … He was out there spraying bullets like a madman,” described Dipendra’s aunt, Princess Ketaki. “He was kicking bodies and just shooting them at close range just to ensure that they had died.”

The Nepali people were told that the shootings were “accidental,” because Dipendra, as a monarch, was traditionally and legally above reproach. Confusion and suspicion about the killings caused turmoil, and several days of rioting followed in which two people were killed and 19 injured, with calm restored only after three nights of curfews.

King Birendra was widely mourned as “a monarch who had used his influence to improve things for the highly impoverished Himalayan nation,” reported The Associated Press.

King Birendra’s brother, Gyanendra, became ruler upon Dipendra’s death. Many Nepali citizens resisted his rule, with some even suspecting him of helping to plot the royal murders.

The Nepali monarchy was to end with Gyanendra’s reign. Maoist insurgents battled the king’s forces, finally winning power after an election in April 2008. They abolished the monarchy on May 28, 2008, and the country became a republic.

According to Princess Ketaki, the weakening power of the monarchy may have played a role in Dipendra’s rampage; he was “frustrated at the thought of fulfilling the role of a modern monarch and was reluctant to relinquish the feudal role of absolute king,” explained the BBC.